Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv prt] into the [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The fighting continued , spreading off the great curve of the ramparts down into the buildings below .
2 At the junction of the Pilgrims Road where one way leads to Birling and the other branches off into the woods there stands the remains of the old Free Chapel of St. Lawrence , which gives its name to the lane running by .
3 It is a quiet and comfortable village to stop in , as I know from having stopped there , with good walks up into the hills and good fishing — for trout , which begin to come into their own around here as the mountain fish .
4 My hon. Friend is right that the Labour party would be prepared to overrule parental ballots and to take grant-maintained schools back into the throes of LEA control , which is exactly what parents have voted to escape .
5 From this road it is possible to make small diversions down into the villages of Jardim do Mar and Paúl do Mar , although the roads in and out of them are more spectacular than the villages themselves .
6 Cable cars and chair lifts carry you effortlessly 7,000 feet up into the mountains , where there are sun-soaked terraces , with entrancing panoramas of the mountains .
7 He comes on stage performing ballet steps , pirouettes off into the wings , makes some weird grunting sounds , then reappears .
8 In their eyes the sea curves off into the heavens .
9 The gag was across the trooper 's mouth , and the pressure of Colt 's knee was into the small of his back , and the sheer strength of Colt 's arm took the trooper 's wrists up into the blades of his shoulders .
10 The Robe had been shot in Cinemascope in order to tempt the new television viewers back into the cinemas .
11 ‘ You know how lawyers can drag things out into the years .
12 When I have finished , I throw the gun several yards off into the brambles .
13 and what they took all the treasures down into the cellars so they were saved and they rebuilt it .
14 Her conversations with the villagers as they shelled peanuts or sat around the fire , the interest she took in her pupils and their home backgrounds , her journeys out into the villages on teaching practice or corps activities had given her an appreciation of how the Africans thought and felt .
15 The following morning the room looked as though an expedition had broken out in it , so we fought all the bits back into the sacs , smiled sweetly at the girl on reception and left .
16 He ran both hands up into the roots of her hair , which she happened to be wearing down , and tried to plant a kiss on her forehead .
17 Only a couple of shots out into the fields from the front door .
18 Storming Le Mort Homme ’ , depicted the Kaiser and the Crown Prince flogging German soldiers on into the arms of Death .
19 Nevertheless , tigers once roamed over most of Asia , some trekked over the frozen north , others up into the mountains of Central Asia and more through the hot humid rain forests of the south .
20 Bragg stuffed the papers back into the pigeon-holes and closed the lid .
21 The Duke will lead them all out and hopefully lead somee lucky ones back into the winners enclosure … you 'll know when … you 'll hear the cheers ringing out for miles around
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